TweetDeck appeals to those who have to watch Twitter all day long. Journalists. Customer support people who’ve been tasked with making sure that everyone on Twitter is happy. And addicts like me.

TweetDeck is a dominant mode app. It takes over your entire screen. I have it running on an old MacBookPro that is toward the end of its life (had the crud beat out of it) and that’s all that machine does: run TweetDeck. It has several columns. The first on my screen shows all my friends that I’m following. The second shows me replies from people who put “@scobleizer” into their Tweets. The third has direct messages that are sent specifically to me. The fourth has a search for “Scoble.” Fifth has a search for “Scobleizer.” Hey, I’m an egotistical baaahhhhssssttttaaarrrrdddd, so sue me. But then the next few columns are things that are interesting to me “Cloud Computing.” “Google.” “TechCrunch.” “Ted.”

You can see how that would be useful for, say, someone who worked at a big company and needed to track everything said about her company, her competitors, and the space her company works in.

I’ve got to admit, I use TweetDeck more often because I like the layout of columns and the fact that it takes over my whole screen.

So, now we come to Twhirl. First, you should know that Twhirl was purchased by Seesmic, which is a video conversation tool. So that’s one thing you’ll notice right away about Twhirl: it’s the best way to do Seesmic videos.

Twhirl also has more features than Tweetdeck. It sends messages to ping.fm, for instance, which will redistribute your Tweets onto other services like friendfeed and facebook.

Lots of people will like the fact that Twhirl looks more like an IM client window and does NOT take over your whole desktop.

So, which one do you like the best?

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Published by Robert Scoble

Chief Strategy Officer at Infinite Retina. https://infiniteretina.com
The Spatial Computing (AR/VR/AI) Agency that helps entrepreneurs with their AR/VR projects and companies.
View all posts by Robert Scoble

I am all over the tweetdeck. i remember when he was taking donations to support development efforts and i paypaled him something like 10 or 20 bucks. 😉 It continues to improve and i just like it so much better for so many reasons. not even close from my perspective; tho both are good.

I am all over the tweetdeck. i remember when he was taking donations to support development efforts and i paypaled him something like 10 or 20 bucks. 😉 It continues to improve and i just like it so much better for so many reasons. not even close from my perspective; tho both are good.

If you use twitter to keep in touch with your friends, to read some news and to chat I think twirl will do the job, also if you use friendfeed. But if you use twitter like a data mine to extract news, new trends or to follow some topics twittdeck is the best. However, for me tweetdeck is still missing some UI features in order to follow more topics/trends. So far with a normal screen I can just have like 5 tabs without feeling again the messiness of the web/twirl interface.

Good post. I definitely have to go with TweetDeck. I’ve tried Twhirl, Twitterific, and a slue of other apps both on my MBP. I really like the ability to have so many columns open at once and to follow not only the “main” conversation traffic of all friends, but the direct messages, replies, TwitScoop, etc. It feels more involved than some of the more simple apps and I guess I feel I get more out of it. (Only thing I didn’t like is the icon which looked horrible in my dock next to more detailed icons. I quickly switched that out.)

I tried an early version of TweetDeck and it scared me, so I was Twhirl all the way. Then I heard that TweetDeck had updated/improved, so I went back to it and loved it. I’m not a “social media professional” though, so I really only had columns for “everyone” and “local friends” in addition to the others.

Now that I’m hearing Twhirl’s gone through an update, I’ll give it a new look. There’s no real war of the clients for me, it’s whichever is more suited to my mood. I’ve never been a fan of seesmic, but site-integration has always drawn me to both apps.

I tried an early version of TweetDeck and it scared me, so I was Twhirl all the way. Then I heard that TweetDeck had updated/improved, so I went back to it and loved it. I’m not a “social media professional” though, so I really only had columns for “everyone” and “local friends” in addition to the others.

Now that I’m hearing Twhirl’s gone through an update, I’ll give it a new look. There’s no real war of the clients for me, it’s whichever is more suited to my mood. I’ve never been a fan of seesmic, but site-integration has always drawn me to both apps.

If you use twitter to keep in touch with your friends, to read some news and to chat I think twirl will do the job, also if you use friendfeed. But if you use twitter like a data mine to extract news, new trends or to follow some topics twittdeck is the best. However, for me tweetdeck is still missing some UI features in order to follow more topics/trends. So far with a normal screen I can just have like 5 tabs without feeling again the messiness of the web/twirl interface.

Good post. I definitely have to go with TweetDeck. I’ve tried Twhirl, Twitterific, and a slue of other apps both on my MBP. I really like the ability to have so many columns open at once and to follow not only the “main” conversation traffic of all friends, but the direct messages, replies, TwitScoop, etc. It feels more involved than some of the more simple apps and I guess I feel I get more out of it. (Only thing I didn’t like is the icon which looked horrible in my dock next to more detailed icons. I quickly switched that out.)

I switched from Twhirl to TweetDeck about a month ago…. I now wish I would have sooner! I love the way you can create custom search columns, which is great for keeping on top of the latest news for a specific thing.

I switched from Twhirl to TweetDeck about a month ago…. I now wish I would have sooner! I love the way you can create custom search columns, which is great for keeping on top of the latest news for a specific thing.

I keep trying to like TweetDeck and indeed gave it another go last night, but its UI has too many niggling faults for me still. From small things like font choice/size; the fact that it puts tweeter/time details at the bottom of each tweet often with a chunk of whitespace between those details and the tweet, but directly above the avatar for the following tweet; the weak unread count marker and how it marks things as read or doesn’t … something very important when tweets will be in multiple columns. So in net a good idea with a (currently) flawed UI to my eyes, though of course UI is very much about personal taste!

Twhirl therefore remains my main Twitter client and indeed I’ve been part of TeamSeesmic for the recent update. It’s simple, but effective. Let’s me tailor it enough to make me happy, and ultimately by only having a single stream it’s easy to read. Downside of course is the “wood for trees” problem that TweetDeck tackles.

So the slickness of Twhirl, with the tailorable multi-columns like TweetDeck please!

Tweetdeck. I like the ability to create groups, track replies and follow specific phrases for clients. Also, I find that the TwitScoop column has a jump on virtually all news services and visually demonstrates which themes are most discussed.

However, I wish it didn’t have a limit on the amount of columns you can create. Although, I find myself glued to it and am probably diminishing in productivity.

I keep trying to like TweetDeck and indeed gave it another go last night, but its UI has too many niggling faults for me still. From small things like font choice/size; the fact that it puts tweeter/time details at the bottom of each tweet often with a chunk of whitespace between those details and the tweet, but directly above the avatar for the following tweet; the weak unread count marker and how it marks things as read or doesn’t … something very important when tweets will be in multiple columns. So in net a good idea with a (currently) flawed UI to my eyes, though of course UI is very much about personal taste!

Twhirl therefore remains my main Twitter client and indeed I’ve been part of TeamSeesmic for the recent update. It’s simple, but effective. Let’s me tailor it enough to make me happy, and ultimately by only having a single stream it’s easy to read. Downside of course is the “wood for trees” problem that TweetDeck tackles.

So the slickness of Twhirl, with the tailorable multi-columns like TweetDeck please!

Tweetdeck. I like the ability to create groups, track replies and follow specific phrases for clients. Also, I find that the TwitScoop column has a jump on virtually all news services and visually demonstrates which themes are most discussed.

However, I wish it didn’t have a limit on the amount of columns you can create. Although, I find myself glued to it and am probably diminishing in productivity.

Since I switched from Twhirl to Tweetdeck I have missed less direct and reply messages, and I am able to follow events more effectively. I found that thinks go lost in Twhirls endless tape of tweets, and for some reason it is inconvenient to switch to the reply or direct’s tab in Thwirl. Maybe I am just to lazy. Tweetdeck for me.

Since I switched from Twhirl to Tweetdeck I have missed less direct and reply messages, and I am able to follow events more effectively. I found that thinks go lost in Twhirls endless tape of tweets, and for some reason it is inconvenient to switch to the reply or direct’s tab in Thwirl. Maybe I am just to lazy. Tweetdeck for me.

Tweetdeck is my hands down favorite. You make an excellent point about suitability for journalist application.

One of my favorite Twitter activities is reporting events, using hashtags. I set up a column to show the hashtag comments in real time. I have an opportunity to manage Replies as well and interact with other Twitterers as they respond to my posts.

There is a built-in tool for issuing posts from Tweetdeck including Replies (that all can see), Direct Messages (for the eyes of the recipient only), Tweets (user initiated posts for all eyes) and ReTweets (copies another message and posts to one’s own followers).

My Tweetdeck works with a default setting that gathers new messages at 12-second intervals. The software sits quietly in my taskbar as short bursts of Tweetdeck notifications appear in the right hand uppper corner of my screen announcing “12 All Friends” (12 of your friends have written posts.

It takes some resolve to resist the urge to click that notification box, which opens the desktop window. When there is a message that says “1 Direct Message” or “1 Reply” or it points to a hashtag I follow closely, I often make a choice to make an immediate response. That choice may be less important if I am working on a higher priority task.

Tweetdeck is my hands down favorite. You make an excellent point about suitability for journalist application.

One of my favorite Twitter activities is reporting events, using hashtags. I set up a column to show the hashtag comments in real time. I have an opportunity to manage Replies as well and interact with other Twitterers as they respond to my posts.

There is a built-in tool for issuing posts from Tweetdeck including Replies (that all can see), Direct Messages (for the eyes of the recipient only), Tweets (user initiated posts for all eyes) and ReTweets (copies another message and posts to one’s own followers).

My Tweetdeck works with a default setting that gathers new messages at 12-second intervals. The software sits quietly in my taskbar as short bursts of Tweetdeck notifications appear in the right hand uppper corner of my screen announcing “12 All Friends” (12 of your friends have written posts.

It takes some resolve to resist the urge to click that notification box, which opens the desktop window. When there is a message that says “1 Direct Message” or “1 Reply” or it points to a hashtag I follow closely, I often make a choice to make an immediate response. That choice may be less important if I am working on a higher priority task.

Sorry, Robert. I abhor ALL these Adobe Air apps. They all look like they’re a chunk of Windows PC on my desktop.

The biggest problem is the font-smoothing…er… lack thereof, actually. I don’t expect x-platform apps to work with the finesse of Mac app. But after 6 1/2 years on a Mac, there’s no way I’m going back to electrocution-style text rendering.

I started out with Twhirl for it’s ease of use – and as a good way to start Tweeting but as the list of people I follow increased I found TweetDeck a better app funcionality-wise (although the learning curve is slightly steeper than that of Twhirl)

I started out with Twhirl for it’s ease of use – and as a good way to start Tweeting but as the list of people I follow increased I found TweetDeck a better app funcionality-wise (although the learning curve is slightly steeper than that of Twhirl)

Sorry, Robert. I abhor ALL these Adobe Air apps. They all look like they’re a chunk of Windows PC on my desktop.

The biggest problem is the font-smoothing…er… lack thereof, actually. I don’t expect x-platform apps to work with the finesse of Mac app. But after 6 1/2 years on a Mac, there’s no way I’m going back to electrocution-style text rendering.

I am so racked off with this new sucky version of Twhirl! I love Twhirl usually; but this one has a spellchecker that’s only programmed for American spellings only.

I’m a Brit – We spell things differently here. Which one is right? You decide. Nevertheless that fact remains. I spell favour thus. I spell centre thus…. Et Cetera. I refuse to speak American for an app. I only try to write in American, to some degree of success, when I write articles for American websites. Otherwise I’m a Brit and I tweet in Brit. I socialise in Brit too. The last thing I want is an app trying to force me to do everything in American. – The only time I’ll ever try to do that is if I move to the States.

I am so racked off with this new sucky version of Twhirl! I love Twhirl usually; but this one has a spellchecker that’s only programmed for American spellings only.

I’m a Brit – We spell things differently here. Which one is right? You decide. Nevertheless that fact remains. I spell favour thus. I spell centre thus…. Et Cetera. I refuse to speak American for an app. I only try to write in American, to some degree of success, when I write articles for American websites. Otherwise I’m a Brit and I tweet in Brit. I socialise in Brit too. The last thing I want is an app trying to force me to do everything in American. – The only time I’ll ever try to do that is if I move to the States.

TweetDeck all the way, used in a similar manner as Scoble. I have an old XP laptop that’s nearly dead (overheats, worthless battery, large vertical strip in the screen), but it’s PERFECT for TweetDeck. I keep it on a cooling tray, plugged in, and line up the vertical dead zone to be between two columns in TD. Wonderful solution.

TweetDeck all the way, used in a similar manner as Scoble. I have an old XP laptop that’s nearly dead (overheats, worthless battery, large vertical strip in the screen), but it’s PERFECT for TweetDeck. I keep it on a cooling tray, plugged in, and line up the vertical dead zone to be between two columns in TD. Wonderful solution.

I like Twhirl, because the windows are separate and I can open and close them separately (yes, I know you can alter the columns on Tweetdeck, but it doesn’t seems as intuitive to me). I manage 3 Twitter accounts, Friendfeed, and Seesmic with them. I couldn’t do that with Tweetdeck or I’d have elevent columns running across the screen of an Air 🙂 With Twhirl, I can make the windows transparent, or use Spaces: I just find it more malleable. This is not, however, a diss of Tweetdeck. I see its uses.

I like Twhirl, because the windows are separate and I can open and close them separately (yes, I know you can alter the columns on Tweetdeck, but it doesn’t seems as intuitive to me). I manage 3 Twitter accounts, Friendfeed, and Seesmic with them. I couldn’t do that with Tweetdeck or I’d have elevent columns running across the screen of an Air 🙂 With Twhirl, I can make the windows transparent, or use Spaces: I just find it more malleable. This is not, however, a diss of Tweetdeck. I see its uses.

Twhirl is best if you have more than one account to follow.
Tweetdeck is best if you have only one account to follow.

That said, Tweetdeck still needs some improvement which I was told were coming, but never did. For example: the ability for the app to alert you ONLY when you get an @ or a DM. I’d also like some more control over the sizes of my columns.

But since I track 4 accounts (2 Twitter, 1 Seesmic, 1 FF), I stick with Twhirl.

Twhirl is best if you have more than one account to follow.
Tweetdeck is best if you have only one account to follow.

That said, Tweetdeck still needs some improvement which I was told were coming, but never did. For example: the ability for the app to alert you ONLY when you get an @ or a DM. I’d also like some more control over the sizes of my columns.

But since I track 4 accounts (2 Twitter, 1 Seesmic, 1 FF), I stick with Twhirl.

TweetDeck for me. I really dislike AIR apps (would prefer Mac-native), but TweetDeck is what I need to function on Twitter. I have several major interests and corresponding networks (locals, coffee, software, social media, …) on Twitter, and being able to separate those into groups is invaluable. It’s the difference between missing most of what’s going on and being able to keep up and interact.

TweetDeck needs some UI tweaks and additional granular configuration, but it’s such a good tool that I overlook those things.

TweetDeck for me. I really dislike AIR apps (would prefer Mac-native), but TweetDeck is what I need to function on Twitter. I have several major interests and corresponding networks (locals, coffee, software, social media, …) on Twitter, and being able to separate those into groups is invaluable. It’s the difference between missing most of what’s going on and being able to keep up and interact.

TweetDeck needs some UI tweaks and additional granular configuration, but it’s such a good tool that I overlook those things.

I don’t want Twitter taking over my entire screen or my entire life. I’m very happy with TwitterFox. It’s a Firefox plugin. It’s ever-present, but inconspicuous until I call for it. Probably not suitable for the number of folks Scoble interacts with, but great for the rest of us.

I don’t want Twitter taking over my entire screen or my entire life. I’m very happy with TwitterFox. It’s a Firefox plugin. It’s ever-present, but inconspicuous until I call for it. Probably not suitable for the number of folks Scoble interacts with, but great for the rest of us.

I use both. Tweetdeck is fantastic when I am immersed in Twitter. But if I need to interact with Friendfeed, Identi.ca and others, Twhirl is the only way to go. Right now, I don’t need a “Highlander” tool that will slay all other tools on my desktop. That will come from Microsoft – someday. 😉 But for now, I will use both.

I use both. Tweetdeck is fantastic when I am immersed in Twitter. But if I need to interact with Friendfeed, Identi.ca and others, Twhirl is the only way to go. Right now, I don’t need a “Highlander” tool that will slay all other tools on my desktop. That will come from Microsoft – someday. 😉 But for now, I will use both.

+1 for Twhirl. Tweetdeck is nice for all the reasons that you mentioned, but Twhirl is ust small and doesn’t get in the way. I really like the way that it loses opacity when it loses window focus. It’s a great tool.

+1 for Twhirl. Tweetdeck is nice for all the reasons that you mentioned, but Twhirl is ust small and doesn’t get in the way. I really like the way that it loses opacity when it loses window focus. It’s a great tool.

Tweetdeck by far is better, and on a 24″ wide screen monitor I only need the primary 3 columns and it only takes up about 1/4 of the screen so I don’t mind it being open all the time.

Twirl just too time consuming to tab back and forth to see reply’s and direct messages. SPAZ for unix is cool though because it color codes direct and reply messages so you can pick them out pretty easily, wish Twirl would do the same thing (and tweetdeck actually).

Tweetdeck by far is better, and on a 24″ wide screen monitor I only need the primary 3 columns and it only takes up about 1/4 of the screen so I don’t mind it being open all the time.

Twirl just too time consuming to tab back and forth to see reply’s and direct messages. SPAZ for unix is cool though because it color codes direct and reply messages so you can pick them out pretty easily, wish Twirl would do the same thing (and tweetdeck actually).

I love how organized tweetdeck is. I’m a big fan of sorting lists. What I like about Twhirls is that I can see the incoming tweets on the bottom of my screen so that I can scan through them easier while doing other work.

I love how organized tweetdeck is. I’m a big fan of sorting lists. What I like about Twhirls is that I can see the incoming tweets on the bottom of my screen so that I can scan through them easier while doing other work.

I have been using Twhirl before Loic’s team took it over and fell in love. I use it for keeping track of my 2 twitter accounts, friendfeed, and seesmic. I love the new ping.fm integration! With all this chatter in here about the features of Tweetdeck, I’m gonna have to give it a shot and see how it compares.

I have been using Twhirl before Loic’s team took it over and fell in love. I use it for keeping track of my 2 twitter accounts, friendfeed, and seesmic. I love the new ping.fm integration! With all this chatter in here about the features of Tweetdeck, I’m gonna have to give it a shot and see how it compares.

Thanks for the review. I will test Twhirl and TweetDeck. I am following circa 700 people now, so I have to get some assistance soon.

Don’t you think that more and more people will use FriendFeed and use this tool in order to keep up with things, following threads, commenting / “like”-voting on stuff? And now with the new search feature, it should be pretty easy to keep tabs on things, don’t you think? I haven’t tested it yet, but I have glanced through your post on it.

Thanks for the review. I will test Twhirl and TweetDeck. I am following circa 700 people now, so I have to get some assistance soon.

Don’t you think that more and more people will use FriendFeed and use this tool in order to keep up with things, following threads, commenting / “like”-voting on stuff? And now with the new search feature, it should be pretty easy to keep tabs on things, don’t you think? I haven’t tested it yet, but I have glanced through your post on it.

Tweetdeck, hands down. Use it mostly as you describe, but have the first column as “Favorites” for folks I follow more closely and converse with more often. Also a column for “Clients” to keep abreast of their interests. The other columns for replies, DMs, and key term monitoring.

Tweetdeck, hands down. Use it mostly as you describe, but have the first column as “Favorites” for folks I follow more closely and converse with more often. Also a column for “Clients” to keep abreast of their interests. The other columns for replies, DMs, and key term monitoring.

Hey Robert!
If you use Tweetdeck, you could really combine a few search keywords into 1 column. Maybe you want to separate them because it means different things to you, but I think if you did a keyword search “Scoble OR Scobleizer”, it could help you see the other columns easier on one screen 🙂

Hey Robert!
If you use Tweetdeck, you could really combine a few search keywords into 1 column. Maybe you want to separate them because it means different things to you, but I think if you did a keyword search “Scoble OR Scobleizer”, it could help you see the other columns easier on one screen 🙂

I am new to both Tweet Deck and Twhirl. I am going to go with Twirl. I will let you know how it goes. I read a blog about it taking up cpu space on a mac etc. But I will see what it does. Anything that connects to hundreds of people on the web in real time will most likely seem to drag a little depending on your setup. Worth a try. Peace

I am new to both Tweet Deck and Twhirl. I am going to go with Twirl. I will let you know how it goes. I read a blog about it taking up cpu space on a mac etc. But I will see what it does. Anything that connects to hundreds of people on the web in real time will most likely seem to drag a little depending on your setup. Worth a try. Peace

I have used Twhirl for a long time. I think it does several things very well. I just started using Tweetdeck. I think it also does several things well. The one big thing that is in Twhirl that is not on Tweetdeck is the ping.fm integration so as soon as someone creates an app for that…I am in wholeheartedly. I currently use both simultaneously as I have several Twitter accounts, a friendfeed and a Seesmic account. It is wonderful having all these in the same convenient place.

I have used Twhirl for a long time. I think it does several things very well. I just started using Tweetdeck. I think it also does several things well. The one big thing that is in Twhirl that is not on Tweetdeck is the ping.fm integration so as soon as someone creates an app for that…I am in wholeheartedly. I currently use both simultaneously as I have several Twitter accounts, a friendfeed and a Seesmic account. It is wonderful having all these in the same convenient place.

Tweetdeck drives me nuts. It makes an obnoxious sound all the time, which I can't figure out how to turn off. It is huge on my screen, so I can't just glance at it while doing other things. But, the worst part is it consistently tells me I need to download an update, but when I try to do so, nothing happens. I am on a Mac.

Hmm. I am very surprised that I also faced the same situation when choosing these clients. So is it Twhirl or TweetDeck? Hmm. I am using Twhirl , as it is looks more simpler than TweetDeck. But if you wanna have the look , its TweetDeck. But the bad side is, both require Adobe AIR. I read sometime back, that it makes the PC slow. But now, I feel that the problem is solved. Another feature missing in Twhirl is, it does not have any option to auto start !! Anyhow cool article!! My Technology Blog has more on this twitter client review.

Hi Robert,I wondered if you ever run across Twitterdeck not being able to load. Try as I might I cannot get Tweetdeck to load. Now I preface that by saying I have an eight year old desktop but I have never had an app just simply do nothing except click like a motor boat when I tried to access it. Any thoughts are appreciated from one so knowledgeable.

I used to use tweetdeck, but couldn’t find any twitter client that did what I really needed (easy read tracking). I hated switching computers and losing track of where I was. That is why I created CrowdLens.

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<h2 align=”center”>Don't Do For Ugg Boots UK</h2>–>If you own a pair of Ugg boots, ugg classic short, be sure to take proper care of them and clean them regularly. With the proper care and cleaning, Uggs can last several years or even a lifetime.You love sheepskin footwear and ugg classic because they are comfortable and fashionable. How to keep them looking great? The following are a few tips to help you to know what you don't do for your natural beauty and functionality uggs.–>Tip one, don't store your cardy boots ugg in a light place. Because they can bleach in extreme sunlight.–>Tip two, ugg boots should not be worn in extremely moist or muddy conditions as moisture can cause problems.–>Tip three, don't clean the exterior of? your uggs knightsbridge with a hard brush or cloth at first time dirty. –>Tip four, trying not to saturate the sheepskin footwear with water, especially warm or hot water. And don't clean them in a washing machine or dryer, this will cause problems with shrinkage and can adversely change the sheepskin.–>Tip five, if need, except specially detergent for sheepskin product, just like classic ugg mini, don't use any wool detergent. Also don't use high concentration cleaning solution.–>Some suggestions for you to protect your natural beauty and functionality uggs long periods of time. And also hoping to help you solving your hesitation, spending little time to know more information about ugg boots.–>All rights reserved, reprint, please specify source comes from http://www.goodugg.co.uk —bailey button,ugg knightsbridge boots,cardy boots,ugg tall classic